Google introduces AI Mode, a new shopping experience that combines visual inspiration, smart guidance, and reliable product data, with features like virtual try-on using personal photos and an agentic checkout to help users buy clothes and accessories more easily and confidently.
Adobe research scientist Dr. Christine Dierk unveiled Project Primrose at the Adobe Max conference, showcasing a breakthrough in fashion technology. The project combines wearable, flexible, non-emissive textiles with modular displays, allowing clothing and other applications to display static or dynamic patterns. Project Primrose leverages Adobe Stock, After Effects, Firefly, and Illustrator to create interactive patterns, offering consumers a new way to interact with fashion. While it is currently a proof of concept, the project has received positive reception, hinting at potential future developments in tech-driven fashion.
The Humane Ai Pin, a post-smartphone personal tech device, made its debut on the runway at Paris Fashion Week, pinned on the clothes of models during Coperni's showcase. The device, resembling a rounded-corner square, is still shrouded in mystery regarding its functionality and features. Questions about its self-containment, support for third-party apps, and general interaction remain unanswered. The Humane Ai Pin faces potential competition from Jony Ive and OpenAI.